North Korea is touting a "great leap forward" in its rocket industry after the successful testing of a new high-thrust engine, state media reported Sunday.

The test measured the thrust power in the combustion chamber, the structural safety and reliability of the engine, and the movement of the turbine pump, the Korean Central News Agency said. It reportedly took place at the Sohae Satellite Launching Ground, in North Pyongan Province.

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CNN military analyst Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling said advances in North Korea's rocket system could help with the country's development of ICBMs -- intercontinental ballistic missiles.

"Some of these technologies which the North Koreans are including in their rocket expansion program actually have to do with a covert method of firing missiles without being detected in advance of actually exploding the devices. So that's part of the issue," Hertling said.

'Historic significance'

State media said the test was successful and marked an event of "historic significance" that could lead to the rebirth of the country's indigenous rocket industry.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un ordered the start of the test and oversaw it from an observation post, the KCNA reported.

Kim emphasized the whole world would "soon witness what eventful significance the great victory won today carries," KCNA reported.

Kim's announcement came hours before US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson met with President Xi Jinping of China -- North Korea's only major global ally -- in Beijing.

Although neither side brought up the subject publicly, Tillerson was expected to raise the prospect of financial penalties on Chinese companies and banks that do business with North Korea.

A spate of reported missile tests

North Korea has conducted a series of missile launches this month, including four on March 6, KCNA reported.

A North Korean military unit tasked with striking US bases in Japan was involved in those launches, the state news agency said.

But a fifth missile fired by North Korea failed. And that's not an unusual outcome.

Last fall, the US and South Korean militaries detected at least two failed missile launches by North Korea.

Still, the world is taking note that North Korea's weapon technology may be improving.

Japan: Children prepare for North Korean attacks

As North Korea's missile program gets more sophisticated, schoolchildren in Japan are preparing for attack.

On a recent sunny day in Oga, children playing duck-duck-goose on the playground stop in their tracks when an announcement blares over the loudspeaker:

"This is a drill," the voice says. "A missile has been launched."

The entire student body rushes to the school's gym. At the end of the drill, a government official addresses to the students.

"The government is doing its best to be amicable to the countries so that the country would not shoot a missile," Chief Cabinet Counselor Atsushi Odani said. "If they shoot a missile, (Japanese) self defense forces will try to shoot them down."

The city of Oga, which juts out on a peninsula from Japan's coast, has reason to be on guard. The Japanese government said three out of four missiles launched from North Korea on March 6 landed in the sea less than 200 nautical miles (around 370 kilometers) from Oga.